A baby isn’t born with an owner’s manual.
Human beings are born into all sorts of circumstances. Some come into loving homes. Some face challenges that make life confusing.
When children are young, they’re under the control of adults who seem god-like in many ways. The adults seem to know everything. They seem to have complete control. We eventually figure out that those adults are typically just as confused as we are, but in the meantime, we absorb everything those adults teach.
Some of what we’re taught is intentional, but much of it is what we pick up from the examples around us. Both good and bad.
By the time a child is in the neighborhood of 18 years old, he or she is considered an adult. The child has spent years trying to define himself or herself in relation to parents, assuming those figures are around. At first, most children want to be just like their parents, but the time soon comes when they want to pull away and live their own lives.
By the time I was in my 20s, I knew everything. Or so I thought. I really thought I had everything figured out. Most people feel the same, either consciously or unconsciously. And then we’re off to building a life as a new adult.
But in all of that messy process, one thing is true for almost all of us. Since we don’t have an owner’s manual, we’ve been programmed by parents and preachers and teachers.
Nobody has ever told us that we need to ask one basic question: How should I live a good life?

Openly gay people in U.S. military? So what? I have no objections
Irony: Libyan rebels now rounding up blacks, sticking them into jails
I’m still hungry for healthy love that my 5-year-old self craved
How do we often know things which we shouldn’t really know?
Film’s tortured protagonist feels uncomfortably familiar to me
Beauty queen’s suicide leaves me pondering lesson of Richard Cory
It’s time to change my story and reinvent myself — one more time
Hurt people hurt people, and it’s hard to forgive that in ourselves
AUDIO: We rarely realize we’re wasting our lives ’til it’s too late